Frederick Noronha on Mon, 16 Aug 1999 02:34:39 +0200 (CEST)


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<nettime> bYtES For aLL Issue # 2 , August 99




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0101010101            Issue No 2 * Aug 1999            1010101010
1010101010      AN OCCASIONAL NEWSLETTER TO MAKE       0101010101
0101010101          COMPUTING AND TECHNOLOGY           1010101010
1010101010    FRIENDLY TO THE NEEDS OF THE MILLIONS    0101010101
1010101010  Compiler: Frederick Noronha fred@vsnl.com  0101010101
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ROADBLOCKS BEFORE MUCH OF THE WORLD IN GETTING ACCESS TO I.T.

Says Dr Michael L. Dertouzos (engineer, inventor, theretician and
director of the Laboratory for Computer Science at the MIT): "A
while ago, I had this naive assumption that I could go to Nepal,
obtain computers and training from the Nepalese and get them to
have a 20 percent jolt in the GNP. But here's what I found out:
only 30 percent of the Nepalese are literate. Of that 30 percent,
only 10 percent speak English. Even if I got someone to provide
everyone of them with a computer with communications, what could
they do with them? They have no skills to sell. To get people to
do this, I would have to educate them, and people don't get
educated overnight. So, 15 years....From this and other
experiences, I've concluded that the information revolution, if
left to its own devices, will mean that the rich are going to buy
more computers, be more productive and become richer, and the
poor will not be able to that and will stand still. History
teaches us that whenever the gap between rich and poor increases,
we have all kinds of troubles."  -- Quoted in NEW YORK TIMES.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INTERNET IS RARE, COSTLY IN MOST OF THE WORLD

Petrazzini, Ben and Mugo Kibati. "The Internet in Developing
   Countries" Communications of the ACM 42(6) (June 1999)
   http://www.acm.org/pubs/articles/journals/cacm/1999-42-6/p31-
   petrazzini/p31-petrazzini.pdf

For most of the world, Internet access is a rare and costly
thing. Topics addressed are the lack of low-cost regional IP
backbones (eg monthly charges for circuits between Asia-Pacific
countries are much higher than monthly charges between those
countries and the US), limited availability of local call rates
for dialup services, and of course the inescapable facts of
poverty and purchasing power. In Ghana, an account with Africa
Online costs $50 per month, almost twice the monthly income of
most Ghanians.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
SITE FOR POVERTY RESEARCH IN ASIA
CIDA (Canadian International Development Agency) has The Poverty
Project Team (Asia Branch) at the site
http://www.acdi-cida.gc.ca/pauvrete/asie

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
UNDP REPORT SAYS U.S. HAS MORE COMPUTERS THAN REST OF THE WORLD
On July 12, the United Nations Development Programme released its
1999 Human Development Report. It notes that the U.S. has more
computers than the rest of the world combined. More than 80% of
Web sites are in English, and less than 1% of the world's
population reads this language. The U.N. authors said that the
price of a personal computer amounts to about a month's salary in
the U.S., but eight years' salary for the average person in
Bangladesh.
http://www.undp.org/hdro/E3.html
http://www.undp.org/hdro/99.htm

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INDIAN DoT TO SET UP NATIONAL BACKBONE
By Uday Lal Pai/ InternetNews India Correspondent
India's department of telecom (DoT), monopoly telecom player,
will establish its own Internet backbone, crossing the entire
Indian sub-continent within six months!  The Telecom Commission
of India has set January 26, 2000 as deadline for setting up
Internet access nodes at every district in India. The project
cost for the national Internet infrastructure is estimated to the
tune of $ 100 million. The DoT has the basic network in
place.
According to its deputy director-general N. Parameswaran, DoT has
to increase the bandwidth and other facilities for easy Internet
access and the entire project would be completed in a year.
According to sources, DoT plans to set up five international
gateways in India's mega metros - New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai,
Calcutta and Bangalore - with 34 Mbps connectivity in the first
instance.
DoT launched Internet services last year and now is operating
Internet nodes in 54 areas. It has a customer base of nearly
50,000 subscribers. The national Internet backbone would mainly
help the ISPs in the smaller cities, said Parameswaran.
http://asia.internet.com/1999/7/2304-india.html

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INFORMATION PROCESSING HOLDS THE KEY, SAYS POLICY ADVISOR
An ubiquitous telecommunications infrastructure linking up all
villages and towns with the rest of the world is essential for
information flow, says Dr T H Chowdary.
This paper's author is the Information Technology Advisor to
Government of Andhra Pradesh and Chairman, Pragna Bharati,
Hyderabad.
http://news.satyamonline.com/section.asp?SectionName=&FileName=1999071
6/choedharyjuly16..htm

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
OPERATING SYSTEM WITH A DIFFERENCE: LINUX GAINS IN INDIA
For those searching for a sturdy, appropriately-priced affordable
computer operating system, please consider Linux.  Linux is
promoted in India through the web-site http://www.linux-india.org

Check it out for answers to questions such as:
* What is Linux?
* Why is it becoming popular?
* Why do you need Linux?
* Does Linux have applications?
* There is no support for Linux...
* But there are no big companies behind Linux...
* Don't I need to be a computer guru to use Linux?

To subscribe to the Linux-India users group, send mail to
majordomo@aunet.org
and in the body write subscribe linux-india-digest

For Linux books and a wide range of software easily accessible in
India, visit http://www.gtcdrom.com
Email for a catalogue: gtcdrom@vsnl.com

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
CONFERENCE: INFORMATION EQUALITY IN THE NEXT MILLENIUM
The Conference on Information Technology in Asia: Information
Equality in the Next Millennium (CITA '99) will be held on
September 15 & 16, 1999 at Kuching, Sarawak in
Malaysia.
The information technology gap and related inequities between
industrialized and developing nations are widening. Most
developing countries are not sharing in the communication
revolution. A new type of poverty - information poverty -
looms.
Information Technology has undoubtedly fuelled the startling pace
of Asia's recent development. Yet, tremendous contrasts still
exist throughout Asia in the extent and depth of IT use. For most
Asians, telephone calls are a rare luxury and computers are
unknown. Are the poor destined to be perpetual bystanders on the
information superhighway? Will the next millennium herald an
information age which is inhabited by a minority elite only or
will the poor majority be allowed to share equally in the
benefits of a wired society?
For more information: http://www.unimas.my/cita99/

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
PAKISTAN TO UNVEIL INFO TECHNOLOGY POLICY ON AUGUST 16
ASIF FAROOQUI reports from Islamabad: Chief Coordinator Programme
2010 Ahsan Iqbal revealed that the government has finalised first
ever National Information Technology Policy and the same would be
unveiled on August 16, 1999.
http://www.brecorder.com/story/S0011/S1103/S1103107.htm

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
PAKISTAN SUGGESTS LOWER DATA TRANSMISSION TARIFF
LAHORE (July 18) : The Punjab Information Technology Board (PITB)
has suggested to the Pakistan Telecommunication Limited (PTCL) to
lower its tariff for data transmission users so that country can
join the Information Super Highway.
The PITB has informed the Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif
that the idea of an electronic government can only materialise if
the PTCL allows differentiation between local and international
access. The PITB Chief said that they were also planning to
establish a local back-bone for the internet users which would
save 60 percent of their time during surfing of local sights.
He said that the sub-marine communication lines could be the best
alternative to the high cost satellite data communication.
However, Pakistan has yet to join this line and it would take
time to establish but nonetheless Pakistan would have to
establish its own local back-bone for the internet users.
http://www.brecorder.com/story/S0010/S1002/S1002108.htm

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
ASIAN INTERNET USERS MAY SOAR BY 40 PERCENT IN THE NEXT FIVE YEARS
SEOUL: The number of Asian Internet users is expected to soar by
40 percent a year to hit 64 million in 2003, generating billions
of dollars in e-commerce and advertising revenue, research seen
Thursday showed.
http://www.brecorder.com/story/S0010/S1002/S1002110.htm

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
CAN I.T. SOLVE *ALL* OUR PROBLEMS?
A recent discussion on the mailing list S-Asia-IT <s-asia-
it@apnic.net> focuses on this issue. Sean Kline (Mostar, Bosnia)
writes: Clearly to expect the internet (or IT generally) to serve
disenfranchised people throughout the world is unrealistic,
particularly given that we already have plenty of important
proxies of well-being before us (literacy, health, telephone
usage, etc.). What about other agents of change such as
governments (those that have made a fiscal commitment to
improving the condition of their people), NGOs and international
agencies? I wouldn't necessarily suggest that these actors should
be the focal point for yet more finite funding, but wouldn't it
be fair to say there are ripple and/or indirect effects of
information flows and technological development that do in fact
benefit marginalized people? Just a thought...
Commented Ahmed Omair <ao@akunet.org>, of The Aga Khan University
in Karachi: I personally feel that this information technology is
only benefiting few areas. Main problems like clean water and
health care for everyone is still a dream. The distribution of
wealth is to be blamed for it....

If you'd like to join this interesting and informative list on
South Asian IT, contact Irfan Khan <khanIA@super.net.pk> or
owner-s-asia-it@apnic.net

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
RESEARCH ON IT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Venkatesh 'Venks' Hariharan <venky@venky.org>  writes in to say
that he is to join the Indian Institute of Information Technology
Bangalore and his area of research there is Information
Technology in Developing Countries (ITDC). He looks forward to
having "lots of notes to exchange in the future".

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
FREE FONTS IN REGIONAL LANGUAGES, TOWARDS AN INDIAN O.S.
Bharatbhasha (http://www.bhratbhasha.org) is an initiative to
promote the use of computers in Indian and South Asian languages.
It give away freeware fonts in Bangla, Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati
and Gurmukhi through this site. It has ported these fonts to
Linux and are now looking for collaborators who can join us in
creating India's first Indian language operating system. "Over
the next few years, we want to localise the Linux user interface
into as many Indian languages as possible," writes Venky
<venky@venky.org> More details also from kumar_harsh@hotmail.com

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INDIA PERMITS PRIVATE GATEWAYS, WITH STRINGS ATTACHED
By Uday Lal Pai InternetNews India Correspondent (July 26, 1999)
The government of India has finalized guidelines for setting up
of private international Internet gateways by Internet Service
Providers (ISPs). This breaks Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited's
(VSNL) monopoly on Internet gateway services.
In the absence of security guidelines, ISPs could not establish
their gateways and were hence, forced to lease capacities from
VSNL. Now, it is mandatory for the private gateway providers to
connect all routers above 2 Mbps with monitoring facilities of
national security agencies such as the Intelligence Bureau (IB)
and RAW.  The permission is not required for use of encryption up
to 40-bit key length. For stronger encryption, the de-cryption
key split into two parts is to be deposited with the telecom
authority.
Soon after the ISP policy was announced by the government in
November last year, several ISPs including Satyam Infoway,
Bharti-BT, Global Electronic Commerce Services and Mahanagar
Telephone Nigam Limited (MTNL) contacted DoT expressing interest
in setting up their own gateways.
http://asia.internet.com/1999/7/2602-india.html

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
A SOUTH-ASIAN WHO HAS WORKED ON 128-bit ENCRIPTION SOFTWARE....
Rediff on the Net has done an interview with Ram Suri, the
developer of a new 128-bit encryption software. The URL is
http://www.rediff.com/computer/1999/jul/09suri.htm

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
WEB-TRAINING FOR NON-PROFIT ORGANISATIONS...
Interested in conducting a short training workshop for non-profit
organisations wanting to learn web-design? Oneworld-South Asia
(http://www.oneworld.org) can help you organise the same. For
details contact Nitya Jacob, Regional Coordinator, South Asia
<nitya@oneworld.org>

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS IN LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES
Check out community technology center (telecenter) experiences in
communities in the U.S. One report included is Steve Cisler's
<cisler@pobox.com> Computer and Communications Use in Low-Income
Communities 12/98
http://www.ctcnet.org/publics.html

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
VILLAGE VITAL STATISTICS ON THE HARD-DISK OF A COMPUTER
The chief minister of India's largest state has something to
boast about -- he has the vital statistics of every village in
his state stored on hard disc. Digvijay Singh has worked hard to
ensure that the central state of Madhya Pradesh is one of a
handful of states to have Internet access in each of its
districts, with details about each village stored in computers.
http://asia.internet.com/Reuters/1999/07/2001-news.html

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INFO SOUGHT ON SOFTWARE BEING USED BY THIRD-WORLD RURAL POOR
Dr Jane Millar <J.E.Millar@sussex.ac.uk> of Science and
Technology Policy Research (SPRU), University of Sussex, is
interested in hearing about any software applications that are
being used among Third World communities and whether/how they
impact community welfare.
She writes: "I am particularly keen to hear examples of systems
that are being used to support small businesses, the use of
geographical or environmental information systems and systems
that are installed in schools, libraries and telecentres."

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INDIAN LANGUAGE, TAMIL, GETS UNIVERSALLY-ACCEPTED KEYBOARD
The South Indian language, Tamil has become the first language in
India to have a universally accepted keyboard and encoding scheme
for use in information technology. The Government will make them
available to the users through various forums including the
Internet. There are an estimated 71 million Tamil speakers
worldwide, mainly in South India, Sri Lanka and Malaysia.
http://www.indev.nic.in/news/2june99.html

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
SCHOOL PROJECT IN NAMIBIA FOR BIODIVERSITY AWARENESS
A school internet development project has been recently launched
in Namibia. *Insect@thon* is a new annual school contest created
by the National Museum of Namibia. Its purpose is to inventory
national biodiversity information (this year, the insects of
Namibia), and promote the Internet at schools in Namibia (less
than 30% of schools in Namibia presently have telephones!). This
is an interactive, participatory event intended to encourage
students to take advantage of the Internet as a vast, and
constantly growing, source of information.
The target of the Insect@thon is to inventory *70,000* hand-
written insect records (comprising 11 data-fields) in *two* days
(14-15 August), employing 15 school teams of 4 - 6 students each.
The Insect@thon event is entirely sponsored by the local
corporate community. Subsequent school involvment by way of the
Internet, i.e., adding more biodiversity records to our webtop
databases, will be rewarded with credit points. These will allow
the students at these schools to obtain additional equipment,
software, Internet subscriptions, payment of telephone bills,etc.
http://www.natmus.cul.na/insectathon.html
Details: Joris Komen, Curator/IT Manager, National Museum of
Namibia <joris@NATMUS.CUL.NA>

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INDIA: SOUTHERN STATE PLANS FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT NETWORK
Kerala's e-governance initiative is off the ground. The RD-Net,
the Rural Development Network, unleashes the power of the
Internet on the state's 152 development blocks.
RD-Net should now enable rural folks to access government data,
apply for loans and lodge complaints from their remote villages.
Last week the government commissioned this rural technology
mission. The RD-Net has linked the state capital and the 14
district headquarters to all the 152 block panchayats already.
Commissionarate of Rural Development Joint Director P C Jain told
Rediff "Rural development across Kerala will not be the same now.
We hope this technological feat we have achieved will help in the
execution of rural development projects much faster."
Jain explains that email, data transfer, data downloading,
application processing and lodging and settling complaints are
all possible through RD-Net. It also provides instant details
about all the poverty alleviation and rural schemes of the state
and the central governments to the villagers.

http://www.rediff.com/computer/1999/aug/05kerala.htm

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
ARE WE HEADING FOR A WORLD WITHOUT WORK?
Economist and social critic Jeremy Rifkin says we're entering a
new phase in history marked by a sharp and inevitable decline of
jobs as a result of computers, robotics, telecommunications and
other technological advances.  Many jobs, he says, are destined
for extinction (blue collar workers, secretaries, receptionists,
librarians, middle managers,and many others), while most of the
new jobs that are created provide low-paying and generally
temporary employment.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0874778247/newsscancom/
"The End of Work:  The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the
Dawn of the Post-Market Era," by Jeremy Rifkin (Tarcher/Putnam 1995).

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
RESEARCH ON I.T. AND LATINOS: INEQUITIES IN ACCESS
The Tomas Rivera Policy Institute (TRPI) has been conducting
national research on the issue of information technology and
Latinos since 1986. Its TRPI's most recent report on information
technology is "Closing the Digital Divide: Enhancing Hispanic
Participation in the Information Age" (1998).
iNEQUITIES in access to information technology exist among
certain segments of the population.  Those least likely to have
access to information technology include the poor, minorities and
those living in rural areas.
Contact: Dr. Paula Bagasao, (909) 621-8897, 241 East 11th Street,
Steele Hall, Third Floor, Claremont, CA 91711-6194

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
DRIK: PICTURE LIBRARY IN DHAKA SHOWING ANOTHER REALITY
Drik is a picture library which is based in Dhaka, the capital of
Bangladesh. The Third World has traditionally been portrayed by
western photographers on short term assignments. Their need to
take "sure sell" photographs prevent them from taking pictures
that stray outside the proven hits: poverty, disaster or
nostalgia. The combination of posh hotels, jet lag and diarrhoea
leaves little scope for pictures that go deeper than the surface.
The predictable outcome, yet another rehashed fund raising
picture of starving children is what Drik is trying to break out
of. Drik operates as a photographic resource centre and nine
years and 100,000 images later it stands tall amongst the image
banks in the developing world.
It's multimedia unit spearheads Drik's attempt at producing
innovative and entertaining information based products aimed at
changing the world perception of developing nations.
http://www.drik.net  Email: partha@drik.net

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
INTERNET INCREASES GLOBAL INEQUALITY, SAYS UN
The Internet is contributing to an ever-widening gap between rich
and poor which has now reached "grotesque" proportions,
according to the new annual UN Human Development Report.
The UN report says the Internet provides enormous benefits in
terms of improved information and contacts. However, it is mainly
used by educated young white males with access to money - so they
benefit, while others are left out in the cold.
The report condemns the polarisation between those who are able
to  take advantage of the benefits of economic globalisation and
technological advances like the Internet, and those forced to
suffer its effects. It says that, for inequalities to be
reversed, the rules of globalisation need to be rewritten.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/newsid_392000/392171.stm

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
CLEARING HOUSE OF RESOURCES ON THE DIGITAL DIVIDE
Washington, DC -- In response to NTIA's release of the Falling
Through the Net III report, the Internet Public Policy Network
(IPPN) has created a clearinghouse of resources for organizations
interested in the digital divide.

Included is information about different types of programs that
address social issues created by the Information Revolution:

Education: Tech Corps (http://techcorps.org/) and the 21st
Century Network (http://www.21ct.org/) show teachers how to use
and teach the use of technology.

Access: Technology for All (http://tfa-houston.org/) is creating
community computer access sites.  The Eugene Free Community
Network (http://www.efn.org/) is working to lower the cost of
telecommunications to disadvantage communities.

Training: Cityskills.org (http://www.cityskills.org/) offers
tools to prepare urban residents for jobs in web development.
Cultural issues: The Administration's campaign to improve the
image of IT workers is important.  SeniorNet
(http://www.seniornet.org/) creates a supportive community for
senior citizens to interact and learn.
Details: Lawrence Hecht hechtl@internetpublicpolicy.com

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
COMMON GROUND ELUSIVE AS TECHNOLOGY HAVE-NOTS MEET HAVES
San Jose, Calif. -- some of the earth's most remote places are
now linked to the Net -- one recent addition is Bhutan, a small
kingdom in the Himalayas, which inaugurated its first Internet
link last month. But there are still no connections at all in
Iraq, North Korea and a handful of African countries. In many
countries that have Internet connections, Net access is
concentrated in the largest cities and is prohibitively expensive
when set against an individual's typical income.
That expense largely restricts the use of the Internet to an
elite, mostly made up of foreigners, government workers and
business people. And in some cases, government censors put the
Internet out of reach for most people in their countries. The
conference here, called INET 99, was the annual meeting of the
Internet Society, a nonprofit group that coordinates Internet-
related projects around the world and has the motto "Internet Is
for Everyone."
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/07/circuits/articles/08nett.htm

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
LIST OF INDIA-RELATED WEB SITES
Compiled with an aim of promoting India-related content in
cyberspace.
http://www.apnic.net/mailing-lists/s-asia-it/9905/msg00015.html

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
GERMAN STUDIES FROM CENTRE FOR DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH
Center for Development Research (ZEF Bonn) on the Grameen Bank
Village Pay Phone Project at
http://www.zef.de/zef_englisch/f_first.html

A. Bayes, J. von Braun, R. Akhter; Village Pay Phones and Poverty
Reduction: Insights from a Grameen Bank Initiative in Bangladesh
http://www.zef.de/download/zef_dp8-99.pdf

A. Bedi; The Role of Information and Communication Technologies
in Economic Development
http://www.zef.de/download/zef_dp7-99.pdf

Details from ZEF Bonn - Zentrum fuer Entwicklungsforschung,
Center for Development Research, Walter-Flex-Str. 3, D-53113
Bonn, Germany Email:  d.mueller-falcke@uni-bonn.de

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
SOME LINKS FOR THOSE WHO MISSED OUR EARLIER ISSUE:

* The *First* Mile of Connectivity: Advancing Telecommunications
  for Rural Development
  http://www.fao.org/WAICENT/FAOINFO/SUSTDEV/Welcome_.htm

* BASIC-NEEDS LIBRARY ON A CD
  http://www.oneworld.org/globalprojects/humcdrom

* INFORMATION-POVERTY RESEARCH
  Contact: mail@ipri.org   http://www.ipri.org/

* LIST-SERVER FOR I.T. DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTH ASIA
  Archives:  http://www.apnic.net/wilma-bin/wilma/s-asia-it

* INFORMATION ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT SECTOR / INDIA
  http:// www.indev.org         Contact Neena Jacob
  neena.jacob@bc-delhi.bcindia.sprintsmx.ems.vsnl.net.in

* SOFTWARE PACKAGE FOR MAHARASHTRA FARMERS / INDIA
  http://www.indian-express.com/ie/daily/19990508/ige08014.html

* VIRTUAL UNIVERSITY IN MADHYA PRADESH / INDIA
  http://www.mpchronicle.com/daily/19990506/0605001.html

* INTERNET-RADIO FOR THE MASSES / INDIA
  http://www.cerfnet.com/~amehta/

* INTERNET RADIO IN SRI LANKA
  http://www.unesco.org/webworld/highlights/internet_radio_130599.html

* VILLAGE KNOWLEDGE CENTRE
  http://www.mssrf.org/information village/knowledge-system-info-
  empowerment.html

* MULTIMEDIA FOR VILLAGERS / Project Vidya-India
  http://www.rediff.com/computer/1999/jun/08intel.htm

* EMAIL-SOFTWARE 'INDOMAIL' CAN WRITE 12 LANGUAGES / INDIA
  http://www.economictimes.com/today/15tech10.htm
  http://www.lastech.com/

* ANOTHER SOFTWARE FOR PAKISTAN, ARABIC SCRIPT
  http://raakim.com

* MEET TO FOCUS ON URDU SOFTWARE IN PAKISTAN
  http://www.sdpi.org

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
bYtES For aLL * Compiled by Frederick Noronha, Journalist
Goa India fred@vsnl.com or fred@goa1.dot.net.in &
Partha Pratim Sarker, Dhaka-Bangladesh partha@drik.net
Compiled  in  public  interest *  May be freely circulated
WEB-SITE (UNDER CONSTRUCTION) http://www.bytesforall.org
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo


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